Todd Becker Ancestral Health Symposium August 9, 2014 MYOPIA: A MODERN YET REVERSIBLE DISEASE...
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Transcript of Todd Becker Ancestral Health Symposium August 9, 2014 MYOPIA: A MODERN YET REVERSIBLE DISEASE...
COPYRIGHT TODD BECKER 2014
Todd Becker
Ancestral Health Symposium
August 9, 2014
MYOPIA: A MODERN YET REVERSIBLE DISEASE
COPYRIGHT TODD BECKER 2014
MY STORY
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TWO QUESTIONS
What causes myopia?
How can it be reversed?
Taipei Times: Singaporean students use iPads in a language arts class at Nanyang Girls’ High School on May 18, 2011
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Definition:
Myopia (nearsightedness) is a refractive defect of the eye, in which distant objects appear blurred because their images are focused in front of the retina, rather than on it.
Myopia is the most common refractive error of the eye and is becoming more prevalent.
Severe myopia can lead to complications such as: retinal detachment, eye floaters, cataracts and macular degeneration.
WHAT CAUSES MYOPIA?
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MYOPIA HAS INCREASED GREATLY SINCE 1970
Vitale, S. et al., Increased Prevalence of Myopia in the United States Between 1971-1972 and 1999-2004, Arch Ophthalmol. 2009;127(12):1632-1639.
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• Large increase among aboriginal peoples after Western schooling
• Correlation between myopia prevalence and academic achievement
• Experimental demonstration of defocus-induced ocular growth in animals
• More correlated in identical twins than fraternal twins
• More correlated between parents and children than “by chance”
• Gene mutations associated with severe myopia (SCO2)
• Wide variation between different ethnic groups
• Asia: 70-90%
• Europe/America: 30-40%
• Africa: 10-20%
IS IT CAUSED BY GENETICS …OR ENVIRONMENT?
Genetic causation - evidence Environmental causation - evidence
Fredrick, Douglas R. (2002). "Myopia", British Medical Journal 3234 (7347): 1195-1199.
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MYOPIA AMONG DIFFERENT OCCUPATIONS
Occupation before recruiting Percent myopic
Farmers and fishermen 2.45%Handworkers (coarse work) 5.24%Handworkers (fine work) 11.66%Merchants 15.76%Advanced students 32.38%
1883 survey of military recruits in Holland:
http://www.myopia.org/ebook/10chapter5.htm
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INTRODUCTION OF SCHOOLING TO ESKIMOS
6-10 11-15 16-20 21-25 26-30 31-35 36-40 41-45 46-50 51-55 56-60 61-65 66-70 71-880
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Myopia Frequency in Eskimo Age Groups
Age Cohort
Perc
ent M
yopi
a
Young, F.A. (1969) The transmission of refractive errors within Eskimo families. Am. J. Opt and Arch. Am Acad. Opt. 46 (9).
Attended school No school
Barrow Alaska study (1969)
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EFFECT OF EDUCATIONAL LEVEL IN GERMANY
Dropouts Vocational Secondary University0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Myopia increases with more education
Education Completed
Perc
ent w
ith M
yopi
a
Mirshahi, Alireza et al., Myopia and Level of Education, Journal of the American Academy of Ophthalmology (2012).
Study of German students (2012)
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PREVALENCE IN DIFFERENT COUNTRIES
http://osiminspiringlife.wordpress.com/2012/12/03/causes-and-prevention-of-myopia/myopia/
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GENETIC PREDISPOSITION
…We performed exome sequencing in 4 individuals from an 11-member family of European descent from the United States. Affected individuals had a mean dioptric spherical equivalent of -22.00 sphere.
…SCO2 encodes for a copper homeostasis protein influential in mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase activity. Copper deficiencies have been linked with photoreceptor loss and myopia with increased scleral wall elasticity.
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DIET AND MYOPIA
Some studies implicate contribution to myopia from:
• Hyperinsulinemia and insulin resistance
• Excess intake of carbohydrate and whole grains
• Deficiency of fish oil / essential fatty acids
• Mineral deficiency or excess (Cu, Zn, Vn)
Cordain et al. (2002)
• Children in islands of Vanuatu have 8 hours of daily compulsory schooling.
• Rate of myopia in Vanuatu children is about 2%
• Vanuatuans eat fish, yam and coconut, and no bread or cereals.
Cordain L, Eaton SB, Miller JB, Lindeberg S, Jensen C (2002). "An evolutionary analysis of the aetiology and pathogenesis of juvenile-onset myopia". Acta Ophthalmologica Scandinavica 80: 125–135
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HOW ENVIRONMENT ACTS ON GENETICS
EnvironmentGenetics
Predisposed Not predisposed
Myopiagenic (education, near work)
Strong myopia> 2.0 diopters> 20/150 Snellen
Mild myopia< 2.0 D< 20/150 Snellen
Non-myopiagenic No myopia No myopia
Fredrick, Douglas R. (2002). "Myopia", British Medical Journal 3234 (7347): 1195-1199.
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WHAT IS THE BIOLOGICAL MECHANISM?
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THE NORMAL LENS CHANGES SHAPE TO FOCUS
Relaxed ciliary muscle
Contracted ciliary muscle
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HOW MYOPIA PROGRESSES
near
far
near
Normalvision
Pseudomyopia
Axialmyopia
far
near
Distance“correction”
far
Near work
near
far
Minus lens
Eye Elongation
Stronger minus
Defocus
Spasm
u
w
x
v
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INCREMENTAL RETINAL-DEFOCUS THEORY (IRDT)• Axial myopia is a consequence of incremental defocus induced by minus lenses
• Time-averaged incremental retinal defocus decreases the rate of of release of neuromodulators responsible for retinal proteoglycan synthesis
• This decreases scleral tissue integrity, increasing scleral growth and the eye’s axial length
• Repeated cycles of near-work transient myopia lead to an an increase in axial growth that leads to permanent myopia.
• Hyperopia results from the opposite process: Focusing in front of the retinal induces the eye globe to grow shorter
Axialmyopia
near
Distance“correction”
nearEye Elongation
Defocus
Hung, G.K., Ciuffreda, K.J. (2003). An incremental retinal-defocus theory of the development of myopia.Comm. Theor. Biol. 8: 511-513
Scleralgrowth
w
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PROOF OF THE IRDT THEORY
Read, Scott et al. (2010) Human optical axial length and defocus. IOVS, 51 (12) 6262-6260.
-
+
0
Demonstrated in chicks, monkeys….and most recently in humans!
28 adults
Eye lengthmeasured using optical reflectometry
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HOW CAN MYOPIA BE REVERSED?
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HORMESIS
• Hormesis is the beneficial response of an organism to a low dose stressor that is otherwise detrimental or lethal at high doses
• Hormesis works by activating defense or repair mechanisms
• The result is supercompensation and increased resilience to stressors
EXAMPLES:
Exercise UV radiation
Immunization Phytonutrients
Calorie restriction Callus formation
Cold exposure Barefoot running
Heat exposure Active focusing
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WEIGHT LIFTINGIS A GOOD EXAMPLE OF HORMESIS
• Lifting heavy objects causes micro-trauma: damage and tearing of muscle fibers
• If performed prudently, muscle repair results in supercompensation and hypertrophy
• Optimal training occurs at “the edge of failure”
SAID Principle:
Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demand
HOW DOES THIS APPLY TO REVERSING MYOPIA?
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WHAT IF GYMS HAD THE SAME BUSINESS MODEL AS OPTOMETRISTS?
The BLEEX consists of a backpack-like frame and mechanical braces connected to the user’s feet, legs, and hips.
Human users wearing the BLEEX can carry a 70-pound backpack yet feel as though they are carrying five pounds.
CONCORD, Massachusetts, December 9, 2004 - Schilling Robotics, LLC, is using SolidWorks 3D mechanical design software to design critical parts of an “exoskeleton” that will someday help soldiers, firefighters, rescue workers, and others carry back-breaking burdens without feeling the weight.
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HORMESIS FOR THE EYES:USING ACTIVE FOCUS TO REVERSE MYOPIA
While reading:
• Print pushing and plus lenses
For distance:
• Progressively weaker lenses
• Fusing ghosted images
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MEASURING MYOPIA WITH A SNELLEN CHART
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• If your correction is more than -2.00 D, no glasses are needed
• If your correction is less than -2.00 D, use plus lenses. Select plus lenses that allow you to read at 15-20” from screen or book
• When you have to sit more than 20” away, graduate to stronger plus lenses!
• Test your vision each week, using a Snellen chart at 20 feet in bright light
• Keep going until you reach your goal…20/20 or even 20/15!
PRINT PUSHINGWith or without glasses
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PRINT PUSHING
D1
D2
D3
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1. Move back from screen or book until you are at the edge of blur (D2)
2. Periodically blink and attempt to bring the print to the edge of focus (D1)
3. Read between D1 and D2, adjusting distance as necessary
4. Do this for 2-4 hours daily, taking breaks every 15-30 minutes
5. Increase distance until it exceeds 20”
6. Graduate to stronger plus lenses and repeat until you can read 20/20
PRINT PUSHINGTechnique
D1
D2
D3
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DISTANCE: PROGRESSIVELY WEAKER LENSES
For distance activities, buy lenses that are progressively weaker by 0.5 diopters
Successively reduce in 0.5 diopter steps
• Walking
• TV
• Movies
• Meetings and lectures
• Riding as a passenger
Zennioptical.com
Orfield, Antonia. Seeing space: undergoing brain re-programming to reduce myopia. Journal of Behavioral Ophthalmology 5 (5) , 123-131.
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TAKING ADVANTAGE OF DIPLOPIA
SHARP BLURRED GHOSTED
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FUSING GHOSTED IMAGES
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FUSING GHOSTED IMAGES
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FUSING GHOSTED IMAGES
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HOW TO STRENGTHEN YOUR WEAKER EYE
patch shield wink
Block the dominant eye in order to work the weaker eye:
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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
• How much time should I spend each day?
• How long before my vision improves?
• Is this the same as the Bates Method?
• Does this method really work?
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HOW MUCH TIME SHOULD I SPEND ON THIS?
GUIDELINES
1. Print pushing and active focus are not “exercises” – integrate them into your routine
2. Spend at 2-4 hours daily print pushing (with plus lenses if myopia is less than -2.0 D)
3. Take breaks every 15-30 minutes. Alternate between looking at objects near and far.
4. Print pushing should feel “awkward” but never painful.
5. If you ever experience strain or redness, take a break for a day or two
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HOW LONG BEFORE MY VISION IMPROVES?
MINDSET• Be patient – it takes months to reverse a condition that was years in the making!
• Approach active focus the way you would any serious exercise, diet or lifestyle change
• Your motivation: Crystal clear distance vision without glasses or contacts!
TYPICAL RESULTS
1. Most people see some improvement within a few weeks
2. The rate of improvement is generally faster in the beginning, then slows
3. It is common to see no change for weeks, then sudden big improvements
4. The excitement comes when you start seeing sharp images in the distance!
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IS THIS THE SAME AS THE BATES METHOD?
Bates was wrong about the physiology of myopia.
• He thought that the eye’s focusing mechanism was controlled by muscles surrounding the eye.
• We now know it is the ciliary muscle that changes only the shape of the lens.
Bates developed some relaxation techniques that might help reverse pseudo-myopia (ciliary strain) but probably do nothing for axial myopia
Beyond Bates :
• Relaxation and distance viewing are great, but this is not very helpful advice for those of use who must spend a lot of time reading and at the computer
• Active focusing at “the edge of blur” provides a way reverse myopia while reading!
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DOES ACTIVE FOCUS REALLY WORK?
• It has worked for me… and for many others
• For success stories, check out gettingstronger.org: 1.3 million views
• “Improve vision – and throw away your glasses”: 165,000 views
• “Eyesight without glasses” on the Discussion Forum: 132,000 views
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REFERENCESEpidemiology1. Filip, Iulia (2014). "Nearsightedness and the indoor life." Atlantic Monthly, May 2
2. Fredrick, Douglas R. (2002). "Myopia", British Medical Journal 3234 (7347): 1195-1199.
3. Mirshahi, Allreza et al. (2013) Myopia and Level of Education, Manuscript 2013-717, Am. Acad. Opthal. Annual Meeting, November 2012.
4. Vitale, Susan et al. (2009) Increase prevalence of myopia in the United States between 1971-1972 and 1999-2004. Arch. Opthalmol. 127 (12): 1632-1639.
5. Young, F.A. (1969) The transmission of refractive errors within Eskimos families. Am. J. Opt. and Arch. Am. Acad. Opt. 46 (9) 676-685.
Biological Mechanism6. Birnbaum, M.H. (1988). Myopia and near-point stress model. In Myopia & Nearwork. Butterworth Heinemann.
7. Drexler, W. et al. (1998). Eye elongation during accommodation in humans. Investigative Opthalmology & Visual Science. 39 (11) 2140-2147
8. Hung, L.F., et al. (1995) Spectacle lenses alter eye growth and the refractive status of young monkeys. Nature Medicine, (1) 761-765
9. Hung, G.K., Ciuffreda, K.J. (2003). An incremental retinal-defocus theory of the development of myopia. Comm. Theor. Biol. 8: 511-513
10. Irving, E.L., et al. (1991). Inducing myopia, hyperopia and astigmatism in chicks. Opt. Vis. Sci., (68): 364- 368.
11. Read, Scott A. et al. (2010) Human optical axial length and defocus. IOVS, 51 (12) 6262-6269.
12. Schaeffel, Frank et al. (1988). Accommodation, refractive error and eye growth in chickens. Vision Research. 28 (5) 639-657.
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REFERENCES
Methods1. Brown, Otis S. How to Avoid Nearsightedness--A Scientific Study of the Eye's Behavior. C&O Research,
1999
2. DeAngelis, David, The Secret of Perfect Vision: How You Can Prevent or Reverse Nearsighedness. Berkeley: North Atlantic Books, 2008.
3. Orfield, Antonia. Seeing space: undergoing brain re-programming to reduce myopia. Journal of Behavioral Ophthalmology 5 (5) , 123-131.
4. Severson, Brian. Vision Freedom, 1998
Websites • gettingstronger.org
• frauenfeldclinic.com
• myopiafree.com
• powervisionsystem.com
• myopiacure.blogspot.ca
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SO….REDISCOVER YOUR NATURAL VISION
Your eyes are adaptive organs• Years of closely reading books, computers and smart phones shorten your focal distance
• Progressively stronger lens prescriptions make the eye grow longer, increasing myopia
But you can use that same adaptability to reverse the process using active focus!• Stimulate your eyes by spending time at the threshold between focus and slight blur
• Use plus lenses when reading close up, weakened prescriptions for distance
• Keep moving back to increase focal distance… use Snellen measurements to check progress!
• Take frequent time out from close up work to focus on distant objects
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SO….REDISCOVER YOUR NATURAL VISION
Have fun with active focusing.
Build it into your daily life --
…make it a habit
…make it a game!
You only have your glasses to lose!
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QUESTIONS?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2235716/Spear-fisherman-catches-fish-mid-air-New-Caledonia.html